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In Rural Wisconsin, German Reigned For Decades (All Things Considered)

Immigrants bring many things to the U.S., but their lasting contribution to the country has always been their children. NPR’s series Immigrants’ Children looks at that legacy, telling the stories of those children and examining the issues they face.

QUoted: “In 1910,” says Joseph Salmons, a linguist at the University of Wisconsin, “a quarter of the population told the census taker they spoke only German and didn’t speak English â?? a quarter of the population.”

That fact stunned Salmons. When he set out to study the area’s census, church and court records, he had no idea the language had thrived for so long. The year 1910 was already a full generation after the mass migration had dropped off, yet Salmons discovered not only that many in Hustisford and other farm towns were still bilingual, but that a sizeable portion was monolingual.